The wraith-like aberration turned and glided back toward Vincenzo’s location. Now more than ever, he wanted to be inside with his partner. But he didn’t budge. The last place he wanted to be was stuck in a hole at the waist with his lower half in prime biting position. He shook and waited. The shark dipped its head and dove deeper. Vincenzo closed his eyes and prayed to God. He was someone Vincenzo had not talked to since his wife had left him. A
Then, with a trio of pumps from its powerful tail, it was gone.
Zahra bit down on her mouthpiece as hard as she could. It wasn’t caused by an act of physical exertion. It was the result of anger and frustration. Eleven of the twelve crates had turned up nothing. Every one of them held the decimated remains of the wine amphorae. A few of the containers were in better shape than others, but none were in the condition the buyer was seeking.
She had just sheathed her knife. Both of her hands rested on the edge of the eleventh crate. Her eyes were closed, and her head was dipped. The rest of her body bobbed at a forty-five-degree angle. She opened her eyes and looked right. The twelfth and final crate awaited her.
Zahra unsheathed her knife and jammed it into a gap between the lid and the crate itself. She gritted her teeth and pushed the grip down, forcing the blade upward. The ancient wood gave way and broke apart. The effort was exhausting and met with a groan from both Zahra and the ship. She paused and looked up. The wreck had made a handful of noises since she had entered, but none louder than this.
The wreck settled. The lid was now free.
Breathing easier now, Zahra sheathed her knife and removed the broken pieces from in between her and her prize. She leaned over the opening and impatiently waited for the cloud of particles to settle. When they did, Zahra grinned ear to ear.
The majority of the crate’s contents were smashed, but at its center, Zahra counted four very much, intact amphorae. She’d done it! Now, she had to remove the artifacts without damaging them, a feat she had never attempted while being underwater.
She used her knife blade to meticulously remove debris from around the tall wine jars. For a moment, Zahra pictured herself doing the same thing, but with a paintbrush from a dino dig site. She poked and picked at itsy bits of wood, and whatever-the-hell else was in the way. Once she was satisfied with her work, she detached one of the four nets folded on her dive belt. Zahra unraveled it and stuck it into place beside her, pinning it to the side of the crate with the tip of her knife.
She flexed her tired hands and shook them as fast as her surroundings allowed. Not only were they strained from the effort, but so was her mind. A nagging pressure had built up in the back of her head, exacerbated by the burden of being underwater. She floated higher until she was directly over the opening. She reached down and gently gripped the exposed handles. Zahra bit her lip and pulled, enthused to feel it slip free with very little resistance. Once it was completely free of its 1,700-year-old bondage, Zahra took a second to admire it. She frowned. There wasn’t much to appreciate. The amphora was covered in hundreds of years’ worth of grime and growth.
A tiny shrimp scurried around to the top of the amphora and raised its pincers up at Zahra, giving her what could only be a double middle finger.
As the hours ticked by, Baahir was becoming more and more suspicious as to why he was actually here. The work had all, seemingly, been done before he had arrived. The only missing piece, it seemed, had been the canopic jar. He pondered all of this while sitting at the light table, staring blankly at